1958 One Cent MS RD Values

Greysheet & Red Book® Price Guide

Sponsor

shop eBay

Sponsor

shop CAC

Sponsor

shop

Sponsor

shop US Coins and Jewelry

Sponsor

shop Stacks Bowers Auctions

1958 One Cent MS RD Values

Details

1958 represents the last year of the long-running wheat ears reverse motif that debuted with the Lincoln cent in 1909. Numbers of surviving examples are huge for this last-year type coin in grades ranging from low-end circulated up through MS66. In grades of MS67 and higher, the 1958 Lincoln cent is a remarkably tough coin with that ranks high on the want lists of registry set collectors.

Obverse: Bust of Abraham Lincoln framed by IN GOD WE TRUST on the top periphery. The word LIBERTY to the left of the portrait and the date and mintmark (If any) positioned on the right side.

Reverse: Wheat ears flanking the words ONE CENT, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The motto E PLURIBUS UNUM on the top perimeter.

Basic Information

GSID:

2024

Coin Date:

1958

Denomination:

1c / One Cent

Designation:

MS

Mint & Coinage Details

Mint Location:

Philadelphia

Mintage:

252,525,000

Coinage Type:

Lincoln Cent

Coinage Years:

1909-1958

Composition:

95% copper; 5% zinc & tin

Physical Characteristics

Weight:

3.11 gr

Weight:

0.11 oz

Strike Type:

Business

Diameter:

19 mm

Coin Shape:

Round

Design Details

Designer:

Victor D. Brenner

Obverse Lettering:

IN GOD WE TRUST, LIBERTY, 1958

Obverse Designer:

Victor D. Brenner

Reverse Lettering:

E PLURIBUS UNUM, ONE CENT, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Reverse Designer:

Victor D. Brenner

Feedback:

Available on Greysheet Marketplace

View All

Dealer Directory

View All Dealers

Greysheet News

View All News
CFA Considers 2027 Commemorative Designs
CFA Considers 2027 Commemorative Designs
4/7/2026

The Commission of Fine Arts reviewed proposed designs for 2027 commemoratives to benefit America's Vet Dogs.

The Business of Numismatics: April 2026 Greysheet Editor's Letter
The Business of Numismatics: April 2026 Greysheet Editor's Letter
4/6/2026

Three months into this fast-paced year, the rare coin market is stable, but does not necessarily possess the heat it had previously.

1796/5 Half Eagle Leads Heritage U.S. Coins Auction to Nearly $12 Million
1796/5 Half Eagle Leads Heritage U.S. Coins Auction to Nearly $12 Million
4/1/2026

Early U.S. gold rarities, an 1879 Flowing Hair Stella and S.S. Central America ingots power strong results in March 26-28 event

Map icon

DAVID LAWRENCE RARE COINS